Title
Pharmacogenetic assessment of tafenoquine efficacy in patients with Plasmodium vivax malaria
Date Issued
01 September 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
St Jean P.L.
Koh G.C.K.W.
Breton J.J.
Espino F.E.J.
Hien T.T.
Krudsood S.
Lacerda M.V.G.
Lon C.
Mohammed R.
Namaik-Larp C.S.
Pereira D.B.
Saunders D.L.
Velez I.D.
Yilma D.
Villegas M.F.
Duparc S.
Green J.A.
Publisher(s)
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
Abstract
Plasmodium vivax has the largest geographic range of human malaria species and is challenging to manage and eradicate due to its ability to establish a dormant liver stage, the hypnozoite, which can reactivate leading to relapse. Until recently, the only treatment approved to kill hypnozoites was the 8-aminoquinoline, primaquine, requiring daily treatment for 14 days. Tafenoquine, an 8-aminoquinoline single-dose treatment with activity against P. vivax hypnozoites, has recently been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration and Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration for the radical cure of P. vivax malaria in patients 16 years and older. We conducted an exploratory pharmacogenetic analysis (GSK Study 208099) to assess the role of host genome-wide variation on tafenoquine efficacy in patients with P. vivax malaria using data from three GSK clinical trials, GATHER and DETECTIVE Part 1 and Part 2. Recurrence-free efficacy at 6 and 4 months and time to recurrence up to 6 months postdosing were analyzed in 438 P. vivax malaria patients treated with tafenoquine. Among the approximately 10.6 million host genetic variants analyzed, two signals reached genome-wide significance (P value ≤ 5 × 10-8). rs62103056, and variants in a chromosome 12 intergenic region, were associated with recurrence-free efficacy at 6 and 4 months, respectively. Neither of the signals has an obvious biological rationale and would need replication in an independent population. This is the first genome-wide association study to evaluate genetic influence on response to tafenoquine in P. vivax malaria.
Start page
161
End page
165
Volume
30
Issue
7
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Farmacología, Farmacia
Parasitología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85089302162
PubMed ID
Source
Pharmacogenetics and Genomics
ISSN of the container
17446872
Sponsor(s)
D.P. declares grants and nonfinancial support from GSK and MMV. A.L-C. declares grants and personal fees from GSK. D.Y. declares grants from GSK. J.B. and G.K. are GSK employees and hold shares/options in GSK. J.G. is a ViiV employee and holds shares/options in GSK. S.D. is an MMV employee. P.S. is an employee at Parexel whose work was funded by a contract with GSK. There are no conflicts of interest for the remaining authors.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus